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Page 1: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

Radiation Protection Q&A

Page 2: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received by a member of the U.S. population EXCEPT:

A. Internal

B. Terrestrial, other than radon

C. Medical x-rays

D. Nuclear medicine

E. Cosmic

Page 3: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G75

D. Nuclear medicine

Out of a total of about 3.6 mSv, nuclear medicine contributes about 0.14 mSv, and the others all contribute about 0.3 to 0.4 mSv each.

Page 4: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002G87: The annual average natural background radiation dose to members of the public in the United States, excluding radon, is approximately ___ mrem.

A. 10 B. 50C. 100D. 200E. 400

Page 5: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question G87

C. 100

Radon adds another 230 mrem/yr. Man-made radiation, mostly diagnostic x-rays, is about 54 mrem/yr.

Page 6: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G82: The principal hazard from indoor radon involves:

A. Whole body dose from gamma rays

B. Skin dose from betas

C. Lung dose from alpha emission

D. Bone dose from deposited radionuclides

Page 7: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G78: The latent period for radiation-induced carcinogenesis (solid tumors) is about ____ years.

A. 1B. 5C. 10D. 20-30E. 40-50

Page 8: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G78

D. The latent period is 20 to 30 years

Page 9: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002

G89: The currently accepted model of radiation dose versus effect used by regulatory agencies to determine dose standards is ____.

A. Linear quadratic

B. Exponential

C. Cubic

D. Linear, threshold

E. Linear, no threshold

Page 10: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2002 Question G89

E. Linear, no threshold

Although there are valid arguments for other models in specific situations, the linear, no threshold model is the most conservative, and is in current use by regulatory agencies.

Page 11: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G86: The radiation protection quantity which has been used in attempts to estimate the cancer risk from x-ray irradiation of personnel is _____.

A. Exposure (X)

B. Air Kerma (K)

C. Absorbed dose (D)

D. Dose equivalent (H)

E. Effective dose (E)

Page 12: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question G86

E. Effective dose (E)In NCRP Report 116 the Effective dose (E) attempts to weight the radiation dose to different organs by the relative cancer risk of each organ.

Page 13: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G79: Perinatal death (at or around the time of birth) is MOST likely to occur as a result of irradiation in humans which occurs in the gestational period of:

A. Implantation of the embryoB. Major organogenesis (21-40 days).C. Second trimesterD. Just before brith (30-36 weeks).

Page 14: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G79

B. Major organogenesis (21-40 days)In early organogenesis the organ buds consist of a few cells, and the loss of some of these can result to a major defect which may not be apparent during gestation, but after birth is too severe to permit independent life.

Page 15: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G88: According to NCRP there is a negligible increase in the risk of adverse effects to the fetus, compared with other risks in pregnancy, up to a total dose of _____mGy.

A. 5B. 20C. 100D. 500E. 1000

Page 16: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question G88

C. 100

Page 17: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G81: Which of the following is true about film badges?

A. Can measure total dose, but cannot distinguish between high- and low-energy x-rays.B. Can measure exposures of 2 mRC. Are insensitive to heatD. Are used to determine exposure by measuring the optical density of the filmE. None of the above is true

Page 18: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G81

D. Are used to determine exposure by measuring the optical density of the film.

Film badges cannot measure exposures below 20 mR. Placing filters over parts of the film allows one to estimate the proportion of dose due to x-rays in different energy ranges. Heat, e.g., exposure to intense sunlight, CAN cause film blackening.

Page 19: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002

G94: According to NCRP Report No. 11, the recommended maximum annual dose equivalent for radiation workers’ whole body is ___ mSv and for the hands is mSv.

A. 5, 5B. 5, 50C. 10, 100D. 50, 50E. 50, 500

Page 20: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2002 Question G94

E. 50, 500

Page 21: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G89: The NRC requires personnel to wear a radiation monitor if they are likely to receive _____% of the annual dose limit

A. 90 B 50C. 25D. 10E. 1

Page 22: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2003 Question G89

D. 10

Prior to 1994 it was 25%, but since this date it has been set at 10%

Page 23: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G86: When calculating radiation barrier thickness requirements, the use factor “U” refers to:

A. The weekly dose delivered at 1m from the radiation sourceB. The fraction of operating time during which the area on the other side of the barrier is occupiedC. The fraction of operating time during which the radiation is directed towards the barrierD. The fraction of the work week during which a particular individual is in the area of interest

Page 24: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G86

C. The fraction of operating time during which the radiation is directed towards the barrier

The use factor can be difficult to calculate, so standard fractions can be used for the walls and floor.

Page 25: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G87: A “controlled area” is defined as:

A. Any area around a radiation facility where the exposure rate is above background

B. an area that one cannot enter unless one is wearing a film badge

C. An area where workers will not receive more than 5 mrem/week

D. An area where the exposure of workers is under the supervision of the Radiation Safety Officer

Page 26: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2001 Question G87

D. An area where the exposure of workers is under the supervision of the Radiation Safety OfficerWorkers can receive up to 100 mrem/week.

Page 27: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002

G98: When calculating room shielding, the use factor U refers to:

A. The weekly dose at the isocenter

B. The fraction of operating time that the area in question is occupied

C. The fraction of operating time that the beam is directed towards the barrier

D. The fraction of the work week that the machine is in operation

Page 28: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question G98

C. The fraction of operating time that the beam is directed towards the barrier.This is hard to estimate exactly, so standard

fraction are generally used.

Page 29: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002

G99: When designing shielding for an x-ray machine, regulations require that the barrier for a fully-occupied non-controlled area must be about ____ HVLs thicker than that for a controlled area.

A. 50B. 10C. 6D. 2E. 1

Page 30: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2002 Question G99

C. 6

The current annual MPDs are 100 mrem for non-controlled areas and 5 rem )5000 mrem) for controlled areas. This factor of 50 requires about 6 HVLs more shielding (26 = 64)

Page 31: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G94: In the event of a 137Cs “dirty bomb” explosion, regarding the use of potassium iodide pills, which of the following is true?

A. KI should be taken as soon as possible

B. KI should be taken if the thyroid has the potential of receiving a dose greater than 15 rem

C. A dose of 130 mg per day is suggested for adults

D. KI will offer no protection

Page 32: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question G94

D. KI will offer no protectionSodium iodide is only used to protect the thyroid from the radioactive iodine released in a nuclear explosion. 131I has a relatively short half-life, and would not be used in a “dirty bomb.”

Page 33: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G91: In general, which of the following detectors has the greatest energy dependence for x- and gamma rays?

A. Thin window geiger tube

B. Air equivalent wall ionization chamber

C. LiF thermoluminescent dosimeter

D. NaI scintillator detector

Page 34: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G91

D. NaI scintillator detectorThe high Z of iodine makes it highly sensitive to low-energy radiation. This is because of the Z dependence of photoelectric interactions.

Page 35: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003G95-98: Match the most appropriate instrument to the procedure in each question.

A. Liquid scintillation counterB. NaI well counterC. Geiger-Mueller (GM) counterD. Thermoluminescent dosimeter ( TLD)E. Ionization chamber survey meter

G95: Gamma ray sealed source wipe testG96: Contamination survey for 99mTcG97: Radiation survey of a diagnostic x-ray installationG98: Personnel monitoring

Page 36: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer for 2003 Question G95-98

G95: B. NaI well counter is an efficient device for measuring low-level gammas. It can also provide energy discriminationG96: C. A Gm counter has a fast response and the ability to detect low levels of gamma raysG97: E. An ionization chamber survey meter is capable of accurate x-ray dose rate measurements with minimal energy dependenceG98: D. The small size and relative energy independence of TLK make it useful as a personnel monitoring device.

Page 37: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001

G93: The basic consideration when disposing of radioactive waste in the sewer system is:

A. Entrance into food and fresh water chain

B. Contamination of the sewer system

C. Fish death

D. Risk to swimmers

E. Evaporation into the air

Page 38: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question G93

A. Entrance into food and fresh water chain

Very low concentrations of radioactive materials, if ingested, can produce high localized radiation doses to internal organs.

Page 39: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2001G94: A unit dose radioisotope is delivered to a hospital. The vendor supplies a calibration of its activity. Regulations require the hospital to do all of the following EXCEPT:

A. Wipe test the package before opening it

B. Treat the packaging material as low-level radioactive waste

C. Independently verify the activity

D. Quantify any residual activity left following use of the radioisotope

E. Keep logs of receipt, use, and disposal (or storage) of all radioisotopes

Page 40: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2002

G100: After installation of a chest x-ray unit, which agency regulates its operation?

A. NRC

B. OSHA

C. HICFA

D. State

Page 41: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question G100

D. StateOnce installed, x-ray units are regulated by the state. Mammography units are also regulated by the FDA, under MQSA standards. The FDA regulates the manufacture and installation of x-ray devices, under 21 CFR 1020. The NNRC regulates the use of “man-made” radioactive materials such as Co-60 units and brachytherapy sources.

Page 42: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX General Question 2003

G100: “ALARA” stands for:

A. As Long As Reasonably Allowable

B. As Low As Responsibility Attainable

C. As Low As Reasonably Achievable

D. As Little As Possible RadioActivity

Page 43: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question G100

C. As Low As Reasonably AchievableALARA is a basic tenet of radiation protection. Obviously, radiation levels could be reduced to negligible levels with huge amounts of shielding that would be prohibitively expensive and unwieldy. The ALARA concept seeks to strike a reasonable balance between safety and practicality.

Page 44: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2003D91-92: Match the following maximum permissible fluoroscopic tabletop exposure rate with the type of II exposure control system (under-table x-ray tube):A. 5 mR/minB.10 mR/minC. 5 R/minD. 10 R/minE. No limit

D91: Manual controlD92: Automatic brightness control

Page 45: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question D91-92

D91: C. 5 R/min With manual control, where the operator sets the mA and the kVp, and it remains at those settings, the federal performance standard limits table top exposure rate to 5 R/min for under-0table x-ray tubes.D92: D. 10 R/min With auto-brightness control systems, the table top exposure rate can be 10 R/min. The philosophy is that in this mode it is allowable to go higher exposure rates for the thick patients.

Page 46: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2003

D93: In 131I therapy for thyroid cancer, the whole body clearance curve is commonly plotted versus time. The radiation absorbed dose to the patient is proportional to the ____.

A. Administered activity of I-131B. Administered activity per unit body surface areaC. Administered activity per unit body weightD. Peak counts in the clearance curveE. Area under the clearance curve normalized to per unit body weight

Page 47: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question D93

E. Area under the clearance curve normalized to per unit body weight.

The absorbed dose depends on the patient specific clearance kinetics. The same activity administered to two different patients of the same weight could result in different absorbed doses, if they metabolized and cleared the 131I at different rates.

Page 48: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2003

D95: Well-collimated AP and lateral chest radiographs are taken on a patient. She later discovers that she was pregnant at the time of the study. The expected fetal radiation dose would be about ___ mSv.

A. 0.005B. 0.5C. 5D. 50E. 100

Page 49: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2003 Question D95

A. 0.005According to HEW 9FDA) 76-8231 the embryo would receive about 0.002 to 0.004 of the primary beam. Since AP chest radiographs usually deliver less than 30 mR at the skin surface, and the LAT is about 2.5 times greater, the dose to the fetus would be less than 0.004 X (30 X 3.5) = 0.42 mR or 0.0042 mGy, which is about 0.0042

Page 50: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2002

D91: In nuclear medicine studies, critical organ doses are usually about ___ Gy.

A. 0.005

B. 0.05

C. 0.5

D. 5

E. 50

Page 51: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question D91

B. 0.05

0.05 Gy = 5 rad

Page 52: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2002

D92: The typical amount of lead in lead aprons used in fluoroscopy rooms is about ___.

A. 10 umB. 0.1 mmC. 0.5 mmD. 0.5 cmE. 1.0 cm

Page 53: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question D92

C. 0.5 mm

0.5 mm Pb will reduce the x-ray intensity by 95% to 99%, depending on the kVp.

Page 54: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2002

D93: During a typical fluoroscopy procedure a radiologist wearing a lead apron and no protective eyewear receives a uniform whole body exposure of 20 mR. How many similar procedures can the raiologist perform in one week?

A. 5B. 15C. 50D.100E. 250

Page 55: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2002 Question D93

B. 15

The NCRP recommended doses are 5 rem/yr to the eyes. This is equivalent to 100 mrem/week whole body and 300 mrem/week to the eyes. Since the lead apron will stop 95 % of the whole body dose, the eye dose is limiting facotr, and will reach 300 mrem after fifteen 20 mR procdures.

Page 56: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Diagnostic Question 2001

Match the exposure with the appropriate exam:

A. 15mR

B. 30mR

C. 60mR

D. 5R

E. 10R

D85: CT head scan ESE

D86: Lateral chest ESE

Page 57: Radiation Protection Q&A. RAPHEX General Question 2001 G75: All of the following contribute about equally to the average annual dose equivalent received

RAPHEX Answer to 2001 Question D85-86

D85: D. 5R

4 to 6 R are typical values for a head scan series

D86: C. 60mR

A lateral chest ESE is typically 50 to 80 mR.